On the afternoon of Feb. 14, TPD was called to the scene of an
apparent solicitation situation in a restaurant parking lot. [You can
read a PDF version of the ten page police report here.] It is there TPD
encountered Alexander and Baker, at a location mere minutes away from
the KVOA studios. Unfortunately, the KVOA studios are situated in a
neighborhood that has a high level of prostitution, and TPD is said to
have told residents they will respond in short order if a call is made.
The call was, and Alexander and Baker were the occupants inside the
vehicle that was the source of the complaint.
No citations were
made, and names were redacted from the official TPD police report, but
numerous sources have confirmed it was Alexander and Baker who were
questioned. In fact, when we made a request for the police report, we
did so using their names. The only result was the report of the Feb. 14
incident.
Which might explain why none of this has made the news
yet. One could effectively argue this isn’t really a news story. It’s
just another incident involving two people who work in the same circles
in a somewhat suspicious, but possibly innocuous situation. It isn’t
exactly new territory for TPD (although the police report's extensive
redaction is somewhat unusual).
“No charges were filed, so it
really falls under the realm of gossip news at that point,” said KGUN
news director Forrest Carr (For what it's worth, Baker does a segment
for KGUN called "No Bad Days With Barrett"). “We don’t really see
ourselves as a gossip style publication.”
Fair enough. That
said, however, KGUN, and every other significant traditional media
outlet in the market, did make the decision to report a demotion within
the ranks of the Tucson Police Department. The investigation into Diana
Lopez garnered significant coverage in December and early February by
local news outlets. Lopez was penalized for sending explicit photos to a
TPD colleague, with whom she was having a relationship.
While
we can take the high road here and suggest that TPD’s decision to
announce the results of its investigation into Lopez was really the
impetus for running the story, we’d be kidding ourselves if the hook
wasn’t sexually suggestive photos. In fact,Universal streetlight are useful for any project. most news outlets went into descriptive detail as to what the photos featured.
Just
because a demotion occurred within the ranks of a taxpayer funded
entity, it doesn’t mean the media has to report it. Indeed, it’s likely
other demotions in rank have not been reported.
But that
precedent creates a bit of a quandary in this case. Not because it
involves Alexander, but because it involves a TFD Captain, who was
questioned about the activity on company time, while in uniform, driving
to the meet-up in a department vehicle. (We attempted to contact Capt.
Baker by telephone, left a voicemail and followed up with an email to no
response. If he does respond, we will update the story accordingly.)
Conceivably,
he could argue he was sharing story information, but at best that seems
curious given the location and the amount of time spent in the car. In
fact, the witness who called TPD in the first place reported that the
car had been seen in that location "every day for the past week."
Even
if you take Alexander and Baker at their word — that they were two
friends who knew each other for less than a year, who did nothing more
than hug and chat in the dead end of an alley — it seems like a
spectacularly poor bit of judgment by the two, both married to other
people. What could they possibly be discussing that wouldn't be better
off talked out over a coffee in a public place? What would any
semi-rational person told this story expect was happening?
Furthermore, if there’s suspicion of misconduct, on the taxpayer dime,Save up to 80% off Ceramic Tile and bobbleheads. the media doesn’t need to wait for a departmental investigation to report potential concerns.
KVOA’s
handling of this situation to date is interesting as well. Either the
company believes whatever story Alexander shared, or is hoping this goes
away. Alexander anchored the noon newscast on Feb. 14, but Tom McNamara
stepped in to handle duties at 4,This frameless rectangle features a
silk screened fused glass replica in a cableties
tile and floral motif. an especially unusual occurrence during sweeps
period, where stations deem it the most critical to have anchors and
reporters in their assigned slots.
Alexander is currently off
the air (news director Cathie Batbie-Loucks says Alexander is "on
vacation") but to this point KVOA’s approach has seemed different than
how they handled a situation with 26-year station news veteran Martha
Vazquez. Vazquez, the noon and 4pm anchor prior to Alexander, was cited
for a misdemeanor shoplifting incident in mid February 2012. Instead of
keeping her on, KVOA forced Vazquez to resign.
The Tucson Weekly
was the first to report the Vazquez story, and then the Arizona Daily
Star—and Weekly—ran numerous stories and follow-ups. TV news outlets
KGUN and KOLD made no mention of the Vazquez incident.
"Reporting
on alleged misdeeds by a direct competitor presents an ethical
challenge,” said Carr in a facebook post in reference to the station’s
decision not to cover the Vazquez story. “It gives the impression that
the report might be motivated, in whole or in part, by a desire to make a
competitor look bad. Ethical news reporting does not allow hidden
agendas, real or perceived. So, misdeeds by a direct competitor must
rise to a pretty high level in order to overcome that perception. Had it
been our own anchor, we would have felt compelled to report it,TBC help
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from factories in China. but in this case, not otherwise. Newspaper
reporters don't face this problem, given that they compete only
indirectly with TV, which leaves them free to pursue the story."
To
date, newspapers and other non-TV news outlets have stayed away from
the Alexander/Baker situation, despite the fact that seemingly every
media outlet in town has the police report in hand, even though further
developments—such as a reprimand by TFD—could change that dynamic.
As for KVOA, consistency may not be its forte.Site describes services including iphoneheadset.
The station allowed former reporter/anchor Brandon Gunnoe to remain on
the job despite a DUI conviction, forced Vazquez to resign over a
misdemeanor shoplifting incident, but has Alexander on board , even
though Alexander could be in violation of the station’s loosely
interpreted morality based contract language, a common inclusion in any
signed deal between the station and talent.
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